- 27 May, 2003 9 commits
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David S. Miller authored
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Hideaki Yoshifuji authored
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Hideaki Yoshifuji authored
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Bart De Schuymer authored
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Hideaki Yoshifuji authored
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David S. Miller authored
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David S. Miller authored
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David S. Miller authored
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Herbert Xu authored
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- 26 May, 2003 31 commits
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Herbert Xu authored
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Hideaki Yoshifuji authored
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David S. Miller authored
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Hideaki Yoshifuji authored
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Hideaki Yoshifuji authored
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bk://kernel.bkbits.net/acme/net-2.5David S. Miller authored
into nuts.ninka.net:/home/davem/src/BK/net-2.5
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Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo authored
Thanks to Adrian Bunk for reporting.
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David S. Miller authored
into nuts.ninka.net:/home/davem/src/BK/net-2.5
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Linus Torvalds authored
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bk://kernel.bkbits.net/jgarzik/net-drivers-2.5Linus Torvalds authored
into home.transmeta.com:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Jeff Garzik authored
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Edward Peng authored
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Edward Peng authored
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Adrian Bunk authored
The patch below removes obsolete #if'd code for kernel 2.0 and 2.2 from drivers/net/wan/lmc/* (this includes the expansion of some #define's that were definded differently for different kernel versions).
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Shmulik Hen authored
This fix makes bonding not commit to a specific ABI version if the ioctl command is not supported by bonding. (It also removes the '\n' in the continuous printk reporting the link down event in bond_mii_monitor - it got in there by mistake in our previous patch set and caused log messages to appear funny in some situations).
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Shmulik Hen authored
This patch fixes the bug reported by Jay on April 3rd regarding long failover time when releasing the last slave in the active aggregator. The fix, as suggested by Jay, is to follow the spec recommendation and send a LACPDU to the partner saying this port is no longer aggregatable and therefore trigger an immediate re-selection of a new aggregator instead of waiting the entire expiration timeout.
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Greg Ungerer authored
Add the m68knommu/Coldfire specific ints.c to build list.
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Greg Ungerer authored
Modify m68knommu/kernel Makefile to no longer compile removed common ints.c.
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Greg Ungerer authored
Remove the m68knommu common ints.c. No longer needed with each sub-architecture now having its own.
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Greg Ungerer authored
Create a m68knommu/ColdFire specific ints.c. It is just simpler to have one for each sub-architecture (which means we currently need 3 for the 3 prominant m68knommu families). Each can handle the hardware setup differences, and there is a few at this level.
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Neil Brown authored
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Neil Brown authored
Linear uses one array sized by MD_SB_DISKS inside a structure. We move it to the end of the structure, declare it as size 0, and arrange for approprate extra space to be allocated on structure allocation.
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Neil Brown authored
raid1 uses MD_SB_DISKS to size two data structures, but the new version-1 superblock allows for more than this number of disks (and most actual arrays use many fewer). This patch sizes to two arrays dynamically. One becomes a separate kmalloced array. The other is moved to the end of the containing structure and appropriate extra space is allocated. Also, change r1buf_pool_alloc (which allocates buffers for a mempool for doing re-sync) to not get r1bio structures from the r1bio pool (which could exhaust the pool) but instead to allocate them separately.
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Neil Brown authored
Arrays with type-1 superblock can have more than MD_SB_DISKS, so we remove the dependancy on that number from raid0, replacing several fixed sized arrays with one dynamically allocated array.
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Neil Brown authored
One embeded array gets moved to end of structure and sized dynamically.
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Neil Brown authored
Multipath has a dependancy on MD_SB_DISKS which is no longer authoritative. We change it to use a separately allocated array.
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Neil Brown authored
To cope with a raid0 array with differing sized devices, raid0 divides an array into "strip zones". The first zone covers the start of all devices, upto an offset equal to the size of the smallest device. The second strip zone covers the remaining devices upto the size of the next smallest size, etc. In order to determing which strip zone a given address is in, the array is logically divided into slices the size of the smallest zone, and a 'hash' table is created listing the first and, if relevant, second zone in each slice. As the smallest slice can be very small (imagine an array with a 76G drive and a 75.5G drive) this hash table can be rather large. With this patch, we limit the size of the hash table to one page, at the possible cost of making several probes into the zone list before we find the correct zone. We also cope with the possibility that a zone could be larger than a 32bit sector address would allow.
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Neil Brown authored
When starting an array fails, we have to tear it down, but in some circumstances (particularly autostart_array) the reference count will be 3, so do_md_stop will fail. With this patch we only worry about the number of users is the array has been fully started.
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Neil Brown authored
raid0 currently uses vmalloc instead of kmalloc. This patch changes to kmalloc. There is one allocation that can occasionally be very large - the hash_table. A subsequent patch will address this issue.
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Neil Brown authored
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Neil Brown authored
Instead of testing last_used (which could change in unusual circumstances) we test against the bdev that we read frmo, and don't write back to there.
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